Siro the Epicurean

Siro (also Syro, Siron, or Syron; fl. c. 50 BC) was an Epicurean philosopher who lived in Naples.

He was a teacher of Virgil,[1] and taught at his school in Naples. There are two poems attributed to Virgil in the Appendix Vergiliana,[2] which mention Siro, and where the author speaks of seeking peace in the company of Siro:

I am setting sail for the havens of the blest to seek the wise sayings of great Siro, and will redeem my life from all care.[3]

Cicero also mentions Siro several times and speaks of Siro along with Philodemus as being "excellent citizens and most learned men."[4] The 5th-century commentator Servius claimed that Siro was commemorated in Virgil's sixth Eclogue as the character Silenus.[5]

Notes

  1. Donatus, Vita Vergilii, 79.
  2. Virgil, Catalepton, 5; Catalepton, 8.
  3. Virgil, Catalepton, 5.
  4. Cicero, de Finibus, ii. 35
  5. Servius on Eclogue 6.1


gollark: Legalize orbital kinetic weapons!
gollark: > farenheitI did check though, and apparently iron has a higher melting point than "red hot" would probably be.
gollark: I think in some cases "red hot" might also be hot enough that it melts.
gollark: What?
gollark: Why? Heating armour and weapons and stuff?
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